Abstract

While physical performance decline rates accelerate after around the age of 70 years, longitudinal athletic performance trends in athletes older than 95 years are unknown. We hypothesized a further accelerated decline in human performance in athletes who still perform at the age of 100 years. To investigate this, longitudinal data of all athletes with results at or over the age of 100 years were collected from the “World Master Rankings” data base spanning 2006–2019 (138 results from 42 athletes; 5 women, 37 men; maximum 105 years) and compared to previously published longitudinal data from 80- to 96-year-old athletes from Sweden (1,134 results from 374 athletes). Regression statistics were used to compare performance decline rates between disciplines and age groups. On average, the individual decline rate of the centenarian group was 2.53 times as steep (100 m: 8.22x; long jump: 0.82x; shot put: 1.61x; discus throw: 1.04x; javelin throw: 0.98x) as that seen in non-centenarians. The steepest increase in decline was found in the 100-m sprint (t-test: p < 0.05, no sign. difference in the other disciplines). The pooled regression statistics of the centenarians are: 100 m: R = 0.57, p = 0.004; long jump: R = 0.90, p < 0.001; shot put: R = 0.65, p < 0.001; discus throw: R = 0.73, p < 0.001; javelin throw: R = 0.68, p < 0.001. This first longitudinal dataset of performance decline rates of athletes who still compete at 100 years and older in five athletics disciplines shows that there is no performance plateau after the age of 90, but rather a further acceleration of the performance decline.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSHuman longevity, limits of the human life span and physical performance in old age are of great interest due to the increasing proportion of older people in western societies

  • It has been speculated that the human mortality rate reaches a “plateau” after the age of 105 (Barbi et al, 2018) but it is unknown whether a plateau, or attenuated decline, exists for physical performance

  • Increased participation of centenarians in competitive sports allows us to assess the rate of performance decline in a population of oldest-old athletes

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Summary

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Limits of the human life span and physical performance in old age are of great interest due to the increasing proportion of older people in western societies. To determine whether the rate of performance decline in master athletes is accelerated after the age of 90 years, we combined the data from 80+-year-old athletes in 5 disciplines from a longitudinal data set we published recently (Ganse et al, 2020b) with new longitudinal data of athletes who still competed at age 100 years or older from the database “World Master Rankings.”. This represents the first master athletics performance data set ever published of this age group. As the optimal type of regression function differed between disciplines, and to be able to compare decline slopes between the centenarians and the non-centenarian old athletes

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